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"There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle." Albert Einstein

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Move!


MOVE from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.
Posted by Clair Bannerman (alias) at 5:42 PM
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Me Today

  • Weather: Cold...and after two days of rain we're a bit soggy
  • Feeling: Let's just say I'm glad that it's the weekend!
  • Cooking: That's a good question - I should make something today
  • Busy Doing: Jamming to some Christmas music and cleaning my house!

Books -Further Education of the Mind

  • In the Presence of Horses
  • The Green Rider Series, Kristen B. (One of the best series I've read in a long time.)
  • Outlander
  • The Hunger Games...this book is really more like a 21st Century Animal Farm
  • The Dressmaker
  • White Queen
  • Black Ships by Jo Graham (definately adult, but so well written!)

Movie Night In...I love a good movie!

  • Mega Mind
  • Taking Chance (Will make you cry like a baby)
  • Charlotte Grey (A bit of a different take on Nazi Germany)
  • Series - Merlin (I LOVE BBC)
  • Robin Hood (Okay, a love Russell Crowe, you'll have to understand that about me...)
  • Kingdom of Heaven (Chuck full of acting power with an epic tale)
  • Miss Potter (Such a great film! Story of the creator of Peter Rabbit)
  • How to Train your Dragon (Possibly my favorite animated movie ever...I'm like a little kid, I watch it over and over)
  • Buck (Sundance winner, Biography of Horse Trainer, heart touching)
  • Lost in Austin (Modern day spin on Pride and Prej.)

Life as a nurse...

Great words by Reb Jeff: Vayishlach: Facing Death

"Rachel died. She was buried on the road to Ephrat — now called Bethlehem. Jacob set up a pillar above her grave. It is the pillar at Rachel’s grave to this day."–Genesis 35:19-20

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viduihttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiva_(Judaism), and preparing the notifications to the community, feel like little fragments of the sacred. I have been entrusted with the care and tending of the most powerful, complex and difficult emotions that a person can experience in life. I have been made, in some small part, a guardian of the memory of a departed soul — a life that touches upon many other lives.After dropping off my older daughter at her high school this morning, I made a stop at Treasure Coast Hospice http://www.tchospice.org/, a remarkable organization that sets a very high standard for the loving and respectful care of the dying. There, I visited a lovely man whom I have seen a few times in his hospice room. I sat by his bedside and listened to him (in full possession of his faculties) as he told me about his worries about his family, the support of his wife after he is gone, and the future of his children and grandchildren. I was deeply moved by the way he put any concern for himself — even while facing death — in a distant backseat to his concerns for his family. When my own time comes, I can only hope to have his awareness of the way that one life can touch so many others.Also at hospice, I visited a woman I have known for the past two years — a dear soul who is a former Jewish religious school director. I sat with her, too, singing psalms to her as I listened to her heavy and labored breathing. I have no medical training, but I have come to know the sound of a person who is close to death. The body begins to fight for each breath as it slowly looses it grasp on life. As I held her hand and sang, I realized that being a rabbi is no protection against becoming one of the people caught in the web of connection. I, too, am changed by the loss of a life that has touched mine.Later in the day, I met with a couple from our congregation. She had just learned that her brother died yesterday in a car crash. Coming to terms with the loss is made more difficult for her by the fact that she and her brother had not seen each other or spoken in five years. Sometimes, people think it is easier to mourn the death of someone who has moved out of your life. In my experience, though, it's harder. Grief is magnified by wounded love and regret. I have no magic words to say to ease the pain of mourning. All I can do is listen, become a vessel in which people place their stories, and offer compassion.Actually, there is one more thing I can do. I can have faith that "all I can do" is all that I need to do. It is enough.In this week's Torah portion (Vayishlach) Jacob watched Rachel, the love of his life, die in childbirth. He was overcome by grief. Jacob had worked for his cruel uncle Laban for fourteen years to earn the right to marry Rachel. Now she was gone. Because she died while they were traveling, Jacob had to bury her by the side of the road. He built a pillar of stones on the spot to mark the place as sacred.This is what we all do, in one way or another, when death enters our lives. We grieve and our hearts break. We wish that we could continue to walk along the path of life with our loved ones forever, but the dead cannot fully join us. We have to leave something behind in order to resume our own journey. So, what do we do? We mark the moment as sacred. We erect monuments — both in cemeteries and in our hearts. The stones we place on top of stones remind us that a life may end, but its sanctity is forever.The Torah says that the monument Jacob built for his beloved continues to stand until this day. A life that touches the lives of others never ceases to send living reverberations throughout the web that binds us all.
Rise, rise again...
Until lambs become lions...

Hi and Hello

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Clair Bannerman (alias)
I'm learning to live loved one day at a time. God is helping me embrace the daily uncertainty of life, and rely on him throughout it all. This blog is the story of my journey, and the expression of my crazy self!
View my complete profile

Torque

Torque
My 3 year old Greater Swiss Mountain Dog puppy; All brawn, no brain!

Gack and Polly

Gack and Polly
My sweet cats

Faithful Few aka My Stalkers

Blogs that entertain me, make me cry, and make me laugh...

  • Big Mama
    Fashion Friday: Edition it’s graduation day
  • The Art of Manliness
    How to Take a Military Shower
  • The Blood-Red Pencil
    The Catch-22 of Review Requests
  • hyperstatic union
    Pilea Glauca Plant - Pilea Glauca Aquamarine Baby Tears | Pilea glauca, Baby : Each plant is unique with its own twisty, turned stems and tufts of needles.
  • lovely lu
    エンダーのゲーム〔新訳版〕(上) (ハヤカワ文庫SF) by オースン・スコット・カード無料pdfダウンロード
  • PW FULL RSS FEED
    This Saturday’s Recipes by The Pioneer Woman
  • Gilbert Stuart
    Can you help determine if this was painted by Gilbert Stuart?
  • Chez Ouiz
    Wonderful Mother's Day!
  • A Tidings of Magpies
    December's End. Forecast for Snow.
  • The Heart and Craft of Life Writing
    Stories Instead of Stuff
  • The Clinkscales Family
    Cardiac Cath Tomorrow
  • The Stair Landing
    We Are Your Friends (2015)
  • Life at Willow Manor
    Cenotaph
  • On the tip of my fingers...
  • That Unreliable Girl
    Onwards and Upwards in 2015
  • Johnstone Journal
    Great Books
  • a la mode
    Welcome to My New Home! Come on Over.
  • The Spudwick Papers
    The Move
  • Mary's Craziness
  • NOX Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs
    Doxycycline and sensitive stomachs in Swissys
  • hiddeninsignificance
    new blog
  • Linda's Rambles
    This is Who I Am
  • SFL: Process of Black Hole Formation
    where is the fire
  • An Explorer's View of Life
    New beginnings....... the last post here.
  • Walk a Mile In My Shoes
    P.S.
  • Brant's Blog of Awesomeness
    And the New Website Is Up
  • Beths News
    A Sad Sad Wednesday
  • the Wanna Be
    Alien Mama
  • MercyMe
  • William P. Young, Author - The Shack
  • Rest in Him

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